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Author Berst, Charles A.

Title Pygmalion : Shaw's spin on myth and Cinderella / Charles A. Berst
Published New York : Twayne Publishers ; [1995]
London : Prentice Hall International, [1995]
©1995
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Description 1 online resource (1 electronic resource (xiii, 158 pages)) : illustrations
Series Gale virtual reference library
Twayne's masterwork studies ; no. 155
Gale virtual reference library.
Twayne's masterwork studies ; no. 155
Summary "The immensely popular and durable Pygmalion has long been familiar to readers and audiences as a unique combination and reworking of two well-known stories, Ovid's telling of the Pygmalion myth and Charles Perrault's "Cinderella." According to Berst, Shaw's heartily derivative play is well on its way to assuming a "major place in the mythic tradition" alongside these two classics. As he accompanies the reader through each of the play's five acts, Berst illumines not only Shaw's understanding of the mythic power of the Pygmalion and Cinderella stories but also the striking departures he took from them. What results is new insight into the theatrical skill that has made Shaw, in the eyes of many, the greatest English playwright after Shakespeare." "Just as "Perrault makes Cinderella's growth from a girl to a woman more important than the hocus-pocus of her transformation," Berst views the spiritual themes in Pygmalion, played out in Eliza's evolution, as the richest, most enduring locus of Shaw's thematic intentions. In comparing the different versions of the play - Shaw's original script, his later revisions, his script for the film version, and the My Fair Lady script - Berst gives us an unprecedented and detailed overview of those intentions." "Maddeningly, Shaw saw his "romance" transformed by many directors into a simplistic love story coupling Higgins and Eliza at the end. Berst's account of Shaw's exasperated efforts to thwart such stagings of Pygmalion - he tried, often unsuccessfully, to forbid "any suggestion that the middle-aged bully and the girl of eighteen are lovers"--Is highly entertaining and bemusing."--Jacket
Provides in-depth analysis of the literary work Pygmalion, as well as its importance and critical reception. Includes a chronology of the life and works of the author
Analysis English drama
Bibliography Includes bibliographical references (pages 143-152) and index
Notes Print version record
Subject Cinderella (Legendary character) -- In literature.
Shaw, Bernard, 1856-1950. Pygmalion.
Cinderella (Legendary character)
SUBJECT Pygmalion (Shaw, Bernard) fast http://id.worldcat.org/fast/fst01356825
Subject Folklore in literature.
Mythology in literature.
Assepoester.
Pygmalion (Shaw)
Folklore in literature.
Literature.
Mythology in literature.
Form Electronic book
ISBN 0805719024
9780805719024